
FAU’s Isaiah Elohim (left) and Josiah Parker (right) battle under the boards against UTSA’s Kaidon Rayfield Wednesday night at the Convocation Center. – Photo by Joe Alexander
By Jerry Briggs
Special for The JB Replay
There will be no March Madness for the UTSA Roadrunners.
Center Devin Williams set the tone defensively in the first half, and Josiah Parker, Isaiah Elohim and Kanaan Carlyle led a second-half surge for the FAU Owls, who defeated the Roadrunners 60-52 Wednesday night at the Convocation Center.
With the loss, last-place UTSA was officially eliminated from contention for a berth in the American Conference men’s basketball postseason tournament.
Roadrunners coach Austin Claunch acknowledged his disappointment in falling short of the 10-team tournament, which will be played from March 11-15 in Birmingham at Legacy Arena.

UTSA sophomore Baboucarr Njie finished with a team-high 21 points and eight rebounds. He hit nine of 13 shots from the field. – Photo by Joe Alexander
But, in a sense, it was a predictable outcome once he started losing the services of key players over the last few months.
On most nights recently, the Roadrunners were missing either five, six or even seven players. Coming into the FAU game, Claunch’s team had played two straight road games with only eight players active, including only six on scholarship.
Regardless, the Roadrunners found the resolve to break a program-record, 17-game losing streak on Sunday afternoon, winning 88-79 on the road against the Charlotte 49ers.
But back at home in the Convocation Center, with nine players active, UTSA couldn’t get the offense moving and lost for the second time this season against FAU, the visiting team from Boca Raton, Fla.
As a result, the Roadrunners’ record fell to 5-21 overall and to 1-13 in a 13-team conference, with four games to play.
“I’m disappointed with the overall record,” Claunch said. “But you’re not going to see us tank. You’re not going to see us fold. I was proud of our fight tonight, and we’ll continue this in our last four.”
FAU, at 15-12 and 7-7, now has some hope for a strong finish and a push into the tournament at Birmingham.

The FAU Owls, led by coach John Jakus, held the Roadrunners to 30 percent shooting and snapped a six-game losing streak. – Photo by Joe Alexander
Parker, a 6-foot-7 FAU freshman guard, helped the visitors snap a six-game losing streak with 16 points and 13 rebounds. He had 10 points and seven boards after intermission. Elohim, another physical player in the Owls’ backcourt, scored 15 points.
Carlyle, the Owls’ point guard, had 12 points, six rebounds and a team-leading five assists.
Williams, meanwhile, was a problem for the Roadrunners’ most of the night. In the first half, the 6-10 redshirt sophomore had four of his team-high seven blocked shots and always seemed to be lurking around the basket to cut off UTSA drives.
“The fact that he did that early,” FAU coach John Jakus said, “I think they were looking around (for him) at the end.” In the end, Williams also finished with 11 rebounds and eight points.
For the game, both defenses played hard and physical in the paint and on the perimeter, and it showed in the final statistics.
Playing without leading scorer Devin Vanterpool, FAU shot only 36.7 percent for the game, far below its season average of 46 percent. UTSA, in turn, mustered only 30.8 percent.
The Roadrunners, attacking the rim most of the night to compensate for six of 26 three-point accuracy, missed numerous times at close range. UTSA leading scorer Jamir Simpson misfired regularly from close range and finished three for 18 from the field.
Multiple times, it seemed Simpson crashed head-long into heavy traffic inside without a foul being called either way.
That being said, Simpson was not alone in his struggles. Outside of sophomore Baboucarr Njie, nobody else in a home team jersey could really find the range in shooting the basketball. Njie, who hit nine of 13 from the field, carried the Roadrunners with 21 points and eight rebounds. Simpson scored nine.

UTSA’s Jamir Simpson had a tough night with nine points on three of 18 shooting from the field. Simpson leads the Roadrunners with 15.8 points per game. – Photo by Joe Alexander
Brent Moss, averaging 15 points per game over his last seven, was held to six points on two of eight shooting.
Guard Dorian Hayes, returning to play after sitting out the last four games with a shoulder injury, scored one point in 11 minutes. He finished zero for three, all on three-point attempts.
Point guard Austin Nunez sat out his third straight game after landing hard under the basket during the last few minutes of a game against the North Texas Mean Green.
Records
FAU 15-12, 7-7
UTSA 5-21, 1-13
Coming up
UTSA at Tulsa, Sunday, 3 p.m.
Notable
A spokesman in the American Conference office e-mailed earlier Wednesday to confirm that an FAU victory would knock UTSA out of contention for the tournament.

UTSA freshman Dorian Hayes played his first game since Jan. 28. He came off the bench with one point in 11 minutes. – Photo by Joe Alexander
A UTSA spokesman said before tipoff that the Roadrunners needed to beat FAU and then needed to win all of their remaining games to have a chance at qualifying for the American tournament.
Ultimately, a second straight regular-season victory was not in the cards, and instead the Roadrunners dropped their ninth straight home game.
Now 2-10 at home, 2-10 on the road and 1-1 on neutral sites, the Roadrunners are looking only to finish strong in the last few weeks.
UTSA completes its schedule with four games, two at home and two on the road.
The trek starts Sunday in a road game at Tulsa (21-6, 9-5). It continues with two straight home against East Carolina on Feb. 25 and against Wichita State on March 1. The Roadrunners’ 45th season is scheduled to close on the road on March 8 at Rice.
FAU played without leading scorer Devin Vanterpool. Vanterpool, averaging 15.8 points per game, had scored 26 in the Owls loss Sunday at home against the South Florida Bulls. He scored 21 in a 110-70 victory over the Roadrunners on New Years Eve in Boca Raton.
First half
In a first half that featured 11 lead changes and three ties, the Roadrunners emerged with a 28-26 lead.
Aggressive defense and poor shooting by both teams led to a sub-par game on the offensive end.
UTSA held FAU to 30 percent from the field. FAU came into the game second in the conference, shooting 46 percent.
The Roadrunners also struggled, hitting only 36 percent.
Njie led the Roadrunners with 10 points and five of six shooting. The 6-foot-6 guard/forward also had six rebounds, including two on the offensive end.
Elohim paced the Owls with seven points, including five in the last six minutes of the half.

Starting guard Brent Moss was held to six points on two for eight shooting. Moss had averaged 15.5 over the last seven games. – Photo by Joe Alexander

















